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General Pinochet is an icon of hate for the left. Biased socialist organisations portray him as an evil man, a man who tried to ruin Chile and who is guilty of human rights abuses and criminal behaviour. We at adequacy are not fooled by the agenda of mainstream news corporations. Join us as we reveal the truth about General Pinochet.
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So why is Pinochet hated by socialists? Simply because he restored civilised values to Chile and saved it from the Communist regime of Salvadore Allende. He turned Chile around, improved its economy and wealth, and restored democracy before voluntarily giving up power. These are not the actions of a despot - they are the actions of a man who did what he had to do to rejuvinate his nation. An admirer and close friend of Margeret Thatcher and disciple of Milton Friedman, Pinochet is a reanaissance man, in the tradition of Secular Humanists and liberals such as William Wilberforce. Part of this can be seen in the help he gave to the British during the Falklands War - Chile selflessly allowed Royal Air Force Jets and special operations units to operate from its soil. This was extremely important to the UK's War effort - without it they may have lost the war. And how does Britain repay Pinochet? By kidnapping him and locking him up (despite his dilpomatic passport) for a number of years. It is no wonder that there was civil unrest in Chile, and that the Union Jack burned in the streets of Santiago that year.
And make no mistake, Pinochet's legacy is nothing short of remarkable. The average Chilean can expect to live longer than the average USian, and in addition Chile has better literacy rates and lower crime than the perturbed USA. How can Pinochet possibly be viewed as a dictator? Well, he saved Chile from Salvadore Allende and his Marxist rule. Leftists around the world hate him for that, because the communist threat was nipped in the bud in Chile. Despite the fact that communism in all its stripes has been an unmitigated failure in every country in which it has been attempted, socialists still think that just perhaps the communist regime in Chile may have been the one, the one that proved communism was an option and the one that would have worked and vindicated their aniquated views. Thanks to Pinochet, they will now never know.
Allende's LegacyTo understand Pinochet, we must first understand the circumstances that led him to take his extraordinary steps. Until 1970, Chile had a well developed democracy, but a collapsing and failing economy. In 1958 Anibal Pinto predicted that the rising economic instabilty would result in political breakdown. The spiral into economic chaos that occurred in the 1960's, followed by the power snatch of Salvadore Allende in 1970 proved him quite correct. These many years of economic deprivation ripped apart Chilean society - wheras in the 1950's Chile showed a normal curve of political views clustered around the centre, by 1970 Chile had become polarised and had lost faith in the moderate centre. There was only the extreme left and extreme right. Further economic deprivations under Allende's disastrous pro-soviet economic reforms (60% inflation, huge unemployment, the appearance of a huge black market) led to a total lack of political compromise, and Chilean society started to fight amongst itself.
Enter General Augusto Pinochet UgarteAt this stage Chile faced a choice. It could either descend into civil war and chaos, and become a typical South American country teetering from one extreme political regime to the next, or it could get the strong man in to quieten down passions, restore peace and normalcy to public life, and steer Chile back to the comity of civilised nations, away from civil war. Many supported this idea, including the United States, which in its role of world peacekeeper was extremely concerned at Chile's seeming unstoppable path to economic and political suicide. At 7AM on 1973, September 11th, President Allende recieved a phone call informing him of troop movements in Valparaiso. Ninety minutes later, his brutal Marxist regime was over and Pinochet had risen to power. Unlike Allende, Pinochet was humble in his new role. He realised he had little experience in running a nation, and unlike so many dictators of the past, he was not arrogant. He solicited the advice of the Chicago Boys, or the Chicago School of Economics, and put Chile on a revolutionary new path - the path towards a free & open market. He also gradually brought the nation towards democracy, and his reign is marked by his meekness and willingness to devolve important policy areas about which he knew little to experts in the field before, finally, in 1990, putting Chile on a sound democratic footing. The left likes to portray him as a killer and murderer, but they merely belie their own extremism. At the time he came to power there was lots of killing on both sides, as Chilean society was so horribly polarised, At this time Pinochet could not control every action of his supporters, and it is absurd to blame him for some of the events, such as the killing of Allende. It would be like blaming George Bush for the murders in the Bronx on a Saturday night in New York. Pinochet is one of the best leaders the world has seen, and every day Chileans are glad and thankful for his legacy of economic stability and democracy. Marxists, socialists, communists and all that rag tag parade hate him, because he shows the success, and support of democracy for the people, of the moderate right.
Viva Chile y el General Pinochet! |